and radishes
and chives today. The big kids wanted to dig.
There were serious conversations going on. There were very deep holes being dug. Grandma stayed far away and let them occupy themselves with a mindless task as they pondered the world.
She is one of my favorite authors. Her oeuvre includes several series, all of them set in in Victorian England. Like with Hilary Mantell, I've learned a lot about English history from her. She paints a vivid and gritty picture of life without proper sewage, wages, and opportunity, let alone a social safety net. Whores and Winston Churchill, spies and poachers, street urchins and royalty populate her novels, and I've cared about every one of them.
Anne Perry is not her birth name. Her easily searchable history starts after her conviction and incarceration for participating in the murder of her girlfriend's mother, when she was 14. Five years later she left Australia for England, changed her name, and settled in America.
Her past wasn't a part of her present. It was never mentioned in articles or interviews. I'm not sure how I came to know about it. She was a presenter at the Tucson Festival of Books one year. My written-and-collected-and-curated question wondered about redemption and forgiveness. It wasn't asked during the Q&A.
Her characters are memorable. I could be friends with them. I don't get them confused. I remember their family relationships. I care about them. I wonder what's next in their lives. Each book in each series has what Big Cuter calls a crime of the week, but it's watching the characters change over time that keeps me coming back.
And now I'll never know what happens to them. They are gone. She allowed them to age over the course of their series, but none were ready to be laid to rest forever.
I am irrationally peeved at her for dying.